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From Bethlehem to Calvary - Chapter Five - The Fourth Initiation - The Crucifixion |
In considering the story of Jesus upon the Cross, it is
essential, therefore, that we see it in broader and more general terms than is usually the
case. Most of the treatises and writings upon the subject are controversial and
argumentative, usually defending or attacking the evidence or the theology associated with
the theme. Or they may be of a purely mystical or sentimental nature in tone and object,
concerning themselves with the relation of the individual [177] to the truth or with his
personal salvation in Christ. But in so doing, it is possible that the real elements of
the story and their highest meaning have been lost. Two things emerge, however, from the
research and the questionings of the past century. One is that the Gospel story is not
unique, but has been paralleled in the lives of other Sons of God; secondly, that Christ was
unique in His particular Person and mission, and that, from a specific angle, His
appearance was unprecedented. No student of comparative religion will question the
Christian parallels to earlier events. No man who has truly investigated with an open mind
will deny that Christ was an integral part of a great continuity of revelation. God has
never "left Himself without witness." (Acts, XIV, 17.) And the salvation of
mankind has always been close to the heart of the Father. To quote one writer who seeks to
prove this continuity:
These facts can be checked by anyone who cares to do so and who is sufficiently interested to trace the growth of the doctrine of world Saviors in world idealism. Edward Carpenter goes on to say, in the same book:
Into the argument for and against these ideas it is no part of this book to enter. The only question which is of importance for us is what part Christ really played as the World Savior, and what constituted the uniqueness of His mission. What was this world to which He came; and what is the significance of His death to the average human being today? Are the facts of His life historically true; and was there a period in our racial history wherein He walked and talked and lived an ordinary human life? Did He serve His race and return to the Source whence He came? The fact of Christ constitutes no problem to those who know Him. They realize, past all controversy, that He exists. They know Whom they have believed. (II Tim., I, 12.) For them, His reality cannot be disproved. They may differ among themselves as to the emphasis to be laid upon the various theological interpretations of His life story, but Christ they know, and with Him they tread life's pathway. They may argue about whether He was God or man, or God-Man, or Man-God, but on one point they all agree, and that is that He was God and Man, manifesting in one body. They may struggle to perpetuate the memory of the dead Christ upon the Cross, or they may endeavor to live by the life of the risen Christ, but to the reality of Christ Himself they all bear testimony, and by the multitude of witnesses the fact is surely established. The one who knows cannot doubt. |
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